Title: Grantwriting for Growth:
1- Grantwriting for Growth
- 10 Strategies for Successful Grantwriting From
the Reviewers Eyes
2FACILITATOR
- Partial TA Client List
- The Ethiopian Community Development Corporation
Arlington, VA - The COGIC Urban Initiatives Economic Development
St. Louis, MO - Good Africa Coffee of Uganda, Africa
- African Community Health Institute San Diego, CA
- Somali African Parent Association, Minneapolis,
MN - Womens Employment Opportunity Project, Atlanta,
GA - Atlanta Refugee Womens Network Atlanta, GA
- Philadelphia Development Partnership,
Philadelphia, PA - Greater Newark Business Development Consortium,
Newark, NJ - CHAMAL, Lynchburg, VA
- The WORLD (Welcoming of Refugees for Lansing
Development) Lansing, MI - Burmese Advocacy Center Fort Wayne, IN
- Midwest Community Development Corporation
Minneapolis, MN - Sustainable Rural Regenerative Enterprises for
Families Atlanta, GA.
- Elizabeth Wilson
- President, EW Associates
- Atlanta, GA
- Elizabeth is a true expert in low and moderate
community economic development initiatives and
policy. Her management portfolio exceeds over six
million dollars to develop small businesses and
includes initiatives funded by the eBay
Foundation, Hewlett Packard Philanthropy and the
Prudential Foundation. - M. Wilson has a strong knowledge of urban,
economic, and small business development. Since
1996, she has provided professional leadership
and training in the development of nonprofit
services and management including program design,
project planning, development budgeting, staff
recruitment, marketing and fundraising in her
various positions. She is the author of business
training curriculum and several books, including
When Life Gives You Lemons, Open a Lemonade
Stand and Young, Gifted Entrepreneurs -
3(No Transcript)
4Annually 307.65 Billion Given
Source Giving USA 2009, Giving USA Foundation,
researched and written by the Center on
Philanthropy at Indiana University
5Strategies for Successful Proposals
Reasons for NOT receiving a grant
Based on an analysis of more than 700 proposals
rejected by the US Public health Services. Roy
Meadot, Guidelines for Preparing Proposals,
Chelsea Lewis Publishers, Inc.
6Follow the Directions
1
- Organize, Clarify and Structure
7Directions Matter!
- 35 50 of ALL federal and foundation proposals
are rejected because they are poorly organized or
dont conform to the RFP guidelines. - Read and analyze the RFP
- Research
- Read winning proposals
- Follow the outline laid out in the RFP
8Remember
- Every year, proposals are disqualified because
the writer failed to follow general format
directions regarding the number of pages,
appendices, fonts, spacing etc. - Reviewers rank proposals lower when writers fail
to follow instructions regarding what content
goes in which section of the proposal.
9Independent eyes see better
2
- Organize, independent eyes and collaborate
10Types of Reviewers
- Mechanical Lockheed Martin (50 rejection)
- Human External Intermediary organizations,
paid reviewers - Human Internal Foundation or Corporate Staff,
volunteer stakeholders
11- Mechanical
- Review Team
- Funder Team
12- The Writer
- Review Team
- Content Reviewer
13Duties of Your Review Team
- Review checklist
- Spelling, grammar
- Timelines
- Research
- RFP Outline
- TTTTs iiiiiii
- Did you answer the ???
- Review strategy selling points
- Cohesiveness
- Jargon-free review
- Goals clearly stated
- Responses are strategic, feasible, realistic,
logical - Competencies
14Finish Early
3
- Timelines, checks and balances
15- Submitting a proposal on the due date is late to
a Reviewer. - Early proposals receive favorable consideration.
- Late proposals, even if received, receive
negative consideration from reviewers. - Online Mechanical
16File 13 Proposals
- Faxed
- Handwritten
- Too many attachments, pages to read
- Obviously patched together from a variety of
sources - Templates
17Remember
- Proposal submission rules must apply to everyone.
It is not up to the discretion of the program
officer to grant you dispensation on deadlines. - Equipment failures, power outages, hurricanes and
tornadoes, and even internal problems at your
institution are not valid excuses. - Get your proposal in two or three days before the
deadline.
18Remember
19Prove It
4
- Back up your facts, edit, and tie in to other
data
20Remember
- Format and brevity are important Do not feel
that your proposal is rated based on its
wordiness. - Proposals are meant as convincing documents, not
reports or research. - State your case, make your main points early and
stay organized.
21Remember
- Reviewers hate being challenged to read densely
prepared text or to read obtusely prepared
materials. - Take pity on the reviewers. Make your proposal a
pleasant reading experience that puts important
concepts up front and makes them clear. Use
figures appropriately to make and clarify points,
but not as filler.
22Tell A Story
5
23Remember
- Address the big picture.
- As you are writing, convey your passion and
enthusiasm for the project, so that reviewers
become excited as they read your proposal. - Describe why your project is exciting and
distinct from others.
24Develop a writing process
6
- Detail your facts, edit, and tie in to other data
25Step 1-Prewriting Step 2-Drafting Step
3-Revising Step 4-Editing Step 5 - Final
26Where's the Beef? Present a clear path from data
to interpretation to theory to result.
27What sets your Proposal Apart? Whats New and
Different?
28Innovate Best Practices
7
- Create, Expand, Go Beyond
29Whats Better?
Whats New?
Whats Innovative?
Whats Hot?
Whats New?
New Services?
Whats New?
New Use of Technology?
New Markets?
Efficient?
Whats New?
Problem Solved?
Whats Different?
Whats New?
Whats New?
Whos New?
Whats New?
Whats New?
303 Cs Capacity, Competence Capabilities
8
- Tell Your Story, Why Your Team, Meet The Need
31Remember
- Make sure the proposal shows that your team has
both the background and expertise to carry out
the project. - Know your organizations areas of expertise, what
are your strengths and what are your weaknesses.
Play to your strengths, not to your weaknesses. - Establish your credentials and expertise in a
subject area. Your track record does count.
32Focus on Needs
9
- Know Their Story, Relate to the RFP, Meet Their
Need
33Remember the Funders Needs
Ask "what can WE do for the corporation/funder/org
anization rather than what the corporation/funder/
organization can do for US".
34Remember
- Know the funding source from which you seek
support. - Never submit a proposal to a funder if you are
not certain that it is the correct source to
support your work. - Dont waste your time writing a proposal that has
no chance of success ...unless
35Unless
- You want to receive feedback from national
reviewers - You want to begin to build relationships with a
new funder - You want to develop a portfolio of ideas
- You have a concept and want it vetted
36Know your Communitys Needs
- Community Assessments
- Focus Groups
- Surveys
- Requests
- Complaints
- Empty areas
-
37Know your Organizations Needs
- Strategic Plans
- Complaints
- Skill sets abilities
- Board Leadership Vision
- Uniqueness
- Natural affinity
38Relationships Matter!
10
- Know Who, What and Why Before You Ask !
39Build Relationships
- Make contacts through your networks
- Memberships in organizations that facilitate
networking - Know what the Funder is doing in your
community/their footprint - Develop the Capacity to quickly publicize your
organizations activities
40Build Relationships
- Facebook, LinkedIn, Social Media
- Online Newsletters, website
- Blogs, webinars, trainings
- Client testimonials
- Media opportunities
- Provide opportunities to collaborate on Board of
Directors, Loan Committees, Advisor Boards,
Volunteers, Memberships, community organizations - Fraternal organizations
4110 Strategies Checklist
-
- Follow Directions
- Independent Eyes
- Finish Early
- Prove It
- Tell A Story
- Writing Process
- Innovate
- The 3 C's
- Focus on Needs
- Build Relationships
42Resources and Tools
- 10 Strategies for Successful Grant Writing
PowerPoint - Foundation Center Corporate Giving Resource List
PDF - Writing Winning Proposal by Shipley Nordic
- Requests for Proposals Feb 2012
43QUESTIONS?
44Follow up Contact Information Elizabeth Wilson
biznow_at_aol.com404-344-2601 www.elizabethwwil
son.com